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harriet tubman
Asian American Writers' Workshop was created in 1991.
American Romantic writers reject rationalism because they believe that intuition and imagination yield greater truths.
Francis Bacon
Federal and National
Abolitionist literature was banned and its writers were expelled from the state of South Carolina in the antebellum period. This was due to the state's strict pro-slavery policies and efforts to suppress any material that threatened the institution of slavery.
You portray the personality the same way you do an actual person -- by the way they act, think, speak, dress, and who their friends are.
Disillusionment
authentically
harriet tubman
they wrote in the vernacular; they wrote either for self-expression or to portray the individuality of their subjects.
Both Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson were vocal abolitionists who spoke out against slavery and supported the antislavery movement in the United States. Thoreau's essay "Civil Disobedience" and Emerson's speeches and essays condemning slavery were influential in shaping public opinion and challenging the institution of slavery. They both used their platforms as writers and thinkers to advocate for the abolitionist cause.
Some major influences in Frederick Douglass's life were his experiences as a slave, his interactions with abolitionist leaders like William Lloyd Garrison and John Brown, and his own determination to fight for freedom and equality. He was also inspired by writers such as William Wordsworth and Lord Byron, as well as his work as a lecturer on the anti-slavery circuit.
Realist writers disapproved of the idealized and exaggerated depictions of love, emotions, and relationships found in romantic writing. They aimed to portray relationships in a more realistic and truthful light, free from melodrama and grandiose declarations.
Historian John Hope Franklin authored several influential books on African American history and slavery, including "From Slavery to Freedom: A History of African Americans." Another notable author is Edward E. Baptist, known for "The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism."
Human Rights, Slavery and the American Dream
no slavery or involuntary servitude except as punishment for crimes